This paper studies the terms of trade effects from unexpected economy-specific productivity increases in both developing and advanced economies using a panel vector autoregression model with interactive fixed effects and the “max-share” approach developed by Francis et al. (2014). First, we find that the terms of trade of developing economies do not deteriorate after unexpected productivity increases and display similar dynamics to those of advanced economies. Second, studying these shocks in a more detailed classification of developing economies shows that the terms of trade worsen following an unexpected productivity increase in the least developed economies, implying that economic underdevelopment can result in unexpected producti...
International trade is frequently thought of as a production technology in which the inputs are expo...
In the process of economic development, the share of manufacturing in total employment first increas...
The paper addresses the question of whether developing countries possess any built-in mechanism that...
This paper studies the terms of trade effects from unexpected economy-specific productivity increase...
This paper studies the terms-of-trade effects from economy-specific shocks to productivity with a f...
There is a general consensus regarding the positive relationship between trade and productivity grow...
Developing economies tend to export more skill-intensive products as they become more productive. Th...
This paper analyzes the international transmission and welfare implications of productivity gains a...
Following a structural economic dynamic approach, this paper examines the potential impact of cumula...
The impact of trade on productivity is a crucial policy question for development, but prior work pre...
This paper presents a simple model that is able to account for three stylised facts about internatio...
Despite the voluminous literature on North-South macroeconomic interactions and the key role of term...
<p>This dissertation consists of two chapters on international business cycles. In the first chapter...
This paper addresses (I) the transition dynamics incompatibility between the BPCM and the Prebisch-S...
This paper analyzes the international transmission and welfare implications of productivity gains an...
International trade is frequently thought of as a production technology in which the inputs are expo...
In the process of economic development, the share of manufacturing in total employment first increas...
The paper addresses the question of whether developing countries possess any built-in mechanism that...
This paper studies the terms of trade effects from unexpected economy-specific productivity increase...
This paper studies the terms-of-trade effects from economy-specific shocks to productivity with a f...
There is a general consensus regarding the positive relationship between trade and productivity grow...
Developing economies tend to export more skill-intensive products as they become more productive. Th...
This paper analyzes the international transmission and welfare implications of productivity gains a...
Following a structural economic dynamic approach, this paper examines the potential impact of cumula...
The impact of trade on productivity is a crucial policy question for development, but prior work pre...
This paper presents a simple model that is able to account for three stylised facts about internatio...
Despite the voluminous literature on North-South macroeconomic interactions and the key role of term...
<p>This dissertation consists of two chapters on international business cycles. In the first chapter...
This paper addresses (I) the transition dynamics incompatibility between the BPCM and the Prebisch-S...
This paper analyzes the international transmission and welfare implications of productivity gains an...
International trade is frequently thought of as a production technology in which the inputs are expo...
In the process of economic development, the share of manufacturing in total employment first increas...
The paper addresses the question of whether developing countries possess any built-in mechanism that...